Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1936 Page: 2 of 8
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1
I
PACK*
PALACIOS BEACON, PALACIOS, TEXAS
October 15,1936
BRISBANE
THIS WEEK
One Human Shipload
A Floating Microcosm
Intelligent Mr*. Widener
Mr*. Astor and Dr. Carrel
"On Board the Normandie. — The
ancient writer made this admission:
There be three
things which are
too wonderful for
me, yea, four
which I know
not:
The way of an
eagle in the air;
the way of a scr-
pent upon a
rock; the way of
a ship in the
midst of the sea:
and the way of a
man with a
maid.
What would
that inspired
writer say of this modern ship in
the midst of the sea? The biggest
*hip he ever saw could be hung
from the ceiling of the dining salon
on this boat or tucked away in a
corner of the sun deck, disturbing
no one.
(5^ ^
i&wetcr
By Edward W. Pickard
_0 Western N'cvfftifyT Union
Arthur llrluhnne
Kleber J. Grant
A modern ocean liner. Queen
Mary. Normandie, Rex or Europa.
as it crosses the ocean indifferent
to waves and winds, is a small
world in itself, a microcosm, with
this little earth playing the role of
"Cosmos." If this ship should sail
to some new, uninhabited island of
Utopia, it might supply everything
necessary to start a new civiliza-
tion better than the one invented
by Sir Thomas More, who has been
made a saint since he wrote
"Utopia" to amuse himself and had
his head cut off for his Catholic
faith.
On board, with his friend.
George Bacon, is Myron Taylor,
head of the United States Steel com-
pany, biggest industrial unit on
earth. He would supply the ma-
terial for skyscrapers, ships, rail-
roads and machinery, plus organ-
ization.
Simon Guggenheim would tell
them how to make corporations
profitable, by "holding on."
Mormons Are Off the Dole,
Says President Grant
CIX month* ago the Latter
^ Day Saints church—otherwise
the Mormons—inaugurated a pro-
gram to make every able bodied
member self-sup-
porting by Octo-
ber 1. In the
great tabernacle
at Salt Lake City
Heber J. Grant,
president of the
church, told an
audience that
the plan had suc-
ceeded and that
t h e drive had
taken a 11 the
needy members
off public relief. The church has
consistently opposed “pay without
work." In reading his report Pres-
ident Grant took occasion to criti-
cise the Townsend pension plan and
government control of crops, and he
warned the members to avoid “po-
litical entanglements."
Under the church relief drive, land
was leased and the needy provided
with implements for tilling. Wom-
ens groups have made clothes and
bedding. Members have contributed
the financial equivalent of two meals
monthly to a special fund.
In scattered storehouses, Mr.
Grant reported, supplies have been
laid up in generous quantities for
distribution among the needy who
helped produce them.
Under the program, the speaker
declares, “the curse of idleness
would be done away with, the evils
j of a dole abolished, and independ-
ence, thrift, and self-respect will be
once more established amongst our
j people.”
Various newspaper workers on
the boat would be ready to start
"the New Utopia Gazette"; Floyd
Gibbons for war correspondent, plus
members of the Edward H. Butler
family, that own the Buffalo News,
and the able Abraham Cahan,
known to more New Yorkers than
any editor in America, with one
exception. And, most important to
newspaper prosperity, the ship car-
ries Mrs. George D. Widener of
Philadelphia, who has traveled up
and down in every corner of the
earth and says to your narrator:
"Mr. Brisbane, I have always
wanted to meet you. because I read
your articles every day.”
There spoke the nucleus of a high-
ly intelligent reading public.
Mrs. Vincent Astor, on her way
back from a grouse moor in Scot-
land, would resume her real job
of promoting deep music, finding
co-operators in the passenger list
—Madame Flagstadt, the admirable
Norwegian singer, a deep soprano
able to make Isolde more impres-
sive than Wagner ever imagined
her. On board also is Arthur Bo-
danzky, ready to conduct the "New
Utopia orchestra.” Mayor La-
Guardia of New York will tell you
how earnestly Mrs. Astor talks to
him about her plans for a great
musical center. But Mr. LaGuardia
will never know what shudders
would sweep from Ward Mc-
Allister’s pineal gland to his
Achilles tendon if he could hear
Mayor LaGuardia say of the young
lady in question, "That Mrs. Astor
is a nice, serious girl, thoroughly in
earnest.”
Social Security Act Is
Due for a Court Test
TTNITED STATES DISTRICT
'-'JUDGE C. B. KENNEMER of
Montgomery, Ala., issued an order
halting collection in Alabama of a
one per cent payroll tax to finance
the unemployment program. The
result, it is expected, will be a clear
cut test of the validity of the New
Deal’s social security act, for law-
yers had no doubt the case would
be carried to the United States Su-
preme court. The order was granted
the Gulf States Steel corporation of
Gadsden, Ala., on a plea that the
unemployment insurance program,
operated in co-operation with the
federal government violates both
state and federal constitutions. A
Supreme court hearing would carry
the threat of possible invalidation
of insurance and pension programs
now under development in the sev-
eral states.
To make this list complete, P.
. Wodehouse is on board, one
hp could and should describe this
lipload of “important humanity"
>ing nowhere in particular, for no
:ason in particular, some in the
eerage, some "tourist” and some,
ith cabins on the sundeck, whose
imes break up passenger hist con-
uuity to make room for the magic
ords "maid, valet and chauf-
ur."
The contest between modern ships
r the "Atlantic blue ribbon," or
ean championship, held at this
oment by the British Queen Mary,
pplies most amazing proof of mod-
n engineering efficiency. Consider
at, in a race across 3,000 miles of
iter, the Queen Mary, after being
aten several times by the French
er Normandie, beat the latter
d took the Atlantic blue ribbon
a margin of less than half a
le, across 3,000 miles of ocean.
I^ie oftener you cross, the more
arly you realize that the ocean
a great deal too big for our
iall planet. It is all one ocean—
[antic, Pacific, Arctic, Antarctic,
touching—water covering three-
arters of the earth’s surface.
Consider the Pacific; take your
rid map, Mercator’s projection,
d it over from Asia toward New
rk and beyond. It will cover
; United States, the Atlantic ocean
J all Europe to the Bosporus.
gl Kin* Feature. Hyndlcale, lno.
WNU Service.
Chicago Meat Packers
Cited by Wallace
/CHARGES of engaging in unfair
1 practices have been filed against
the Armour and Swift meat pack-
ing companies of Chicago, and Sec-
retary of Agriculture Wallace has
cited them for a hearing in New
York on November 2, for violation
of the packers and stockyards act
of 1921.
According to Dr, A. W. Miller of
the bureau of animal industry, the
complaint was based on the charge
that the packers had been obtaining
business in violation of the law from
steamship companies in New York.
Under the alleged illegal arrange-
ment, Miller said, Armour and Swift
had arranged a reciprocal agree-
ment by which they sola meat to
the ship owners and in return sent
their exports abroad in their ships.
Another charge was that the pack-
ers had extended credit for longer
periods for favored customers than
for others.
Test Case Started Under
Robinson-Patman Act
'T'HREE complaints we.c filed by
A ;he federal trade commission un-
der the RobinsonPatman act, nam-
ing five concerns, launching the first
move to test its powers under this
far-reaching legislation which for-
bids the granting or receiving by
merchandisers of discriminatory
price discounts in interstate com-
merce.
The complaints named Montgom-
ery Ward and Company, Inc.;
Kraft - Phenix Cheese corpo-
ration, Chicago; Shefford Cheese
company, Inc., Syracuse, N. Y.;
Bird and Son, Inc., and Bird Floor
Covering Sales corporation, East
Walpole, Mass.
Montgomery Ward and Company
is named jointly with Bird and Son
and the Bird Floor Covering Sales
corporation, a subsidiary. The com-
plaint contends that the two Bird
companies sold floor coverings to
Montgomery Ward and Company at
substantially lower prices than to
competing retailers.
Kraft-Phenix Cheese was charged
with discriminating in price be-
tween purchasers, with the alleged
effect of lessening and injuring com-
petition between it and other manu-
facturers and distributors of similar
products. Lessening of competition
between customers of Kraft-Phenix
was also alleged, and some of them
were alleged to have received fa-
vored prices.
In filing its bill of complaint, the
commission pointed out that no alle-
gation was made of "bad faith or
any subterfuge or secrecy on the
part of Kraft-Phenix in connection
with its price policy."
Charges against Shefford Cheese
were substantially the same as in
the case of Kraft-Phenix.
Secretaiy Ickes Reports
Alleged Collusive Bids
CECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
^ ICKES referred to the Depart-
ment of Justice for investigation two
new instances of alleged collusive
bidding for federal construction ma-
terial contracts. The charges are
against seventeen copper cable and
steel tubing firms. The Justice de-
partment already has under investi-
gation previous charges made by
Ickes of collusive bidding on steel
contracts.
The projects affected were the
North Platte reclamation develop-
ment in Nebraska, and the Grand
Coullee Dam in the Columbia river
basin of Washington.
Many of the bids in both cases,
said Mr. Ickes, were identical. How-
ever, in each case at least one bid-
der submitted different and lower
figures, and the contracts were
awarded.
Former Ambassador Straus
Taken by Pneumonia
TESSE ISADOR STRAUS, mer-
“ chant prince and, until his resigna-
tion last August, American ambas-
sador to France, passed away in
his New York home
at the nge of sixty-
four. The immedi-
ate cause of death
was pneumonia, but
Mr. Straus had been
| in ill health for some
time, this being the
j reason for his re*
J i tiremcnt from the
k i ambassadorship.
S Graduating from
■s . : :i Harvard in i8g3? Mr.
Jesse I. btraus Straus began work
as a bank clerk. In 1896 he ob-
tained employment with R. H. Macy
& Co., big New’ Y'ork department
store, and by 1919 was its presi-
dent, holding that position until he
was given the Paris post by Presi-
dent Roosevelt in 1933. He was a
Democrat and was a member of
the board of overseers of Harvard
and of the American Academy of
Political and Social Science. He
maintained a country estate at
Mount Kisco, N. Y., as well as a city
apartment.
Madrid Claims Victories
Over the Insurgents
'TPHOUGH the capture of Toledo
A by the Spanish insurgents was a
severe blow for the government, it
by no means ended the civil war.
Madrid announces that one of the
loyalist columns broke the rebel lino
that almost surrounded the capital
and re-took the important Junction
town of Mnqueda. An army of loyal-
ists miners was reported to have
reached the outskirts of Oviedo, and
reinforcements for the Madrid gar-
rison were on their way from Astu-
rias province and from Valencia.
The government forces also were
said to have taken the important
town of Motrico on the Bay of Bis-
cay.
Gen. Francisco Franco, chief of
the insurgents, decreed a Fascist
dictatorship and created a "junta
of state” which will govern subject
to his will. In his first statement of
policy, Franco assured workers they
would be "protected against the ills
of capitalism” and that "steps
would be taken to regulate favor-
able working hours.”
“All Spaniards will be obliged to
work according to their capacity,"
he said. "In ihe new state no par-
asitical citizens will be permitted."
William F.
Blcakiey
Bleakley and Lehman for
New York Governorship
D EPUBLICANS and Democrats
F'- of New York state met in con-
vention at Albany and Syracuse re-
spectively, selected their state tick-
ets and started on a
hot campaign. The
Republicans entered
the fight under a
new leader for they
named William F.
Bleakley of Yon-
kers, Supreme court
justice, for the gov-
ernorship. The fifty-
t v two-year-old jurist
jyc jflMn prepared to resign
from the bench and
take command at
once.
Col. Ralph K. Robertson of Buf-
falo was nominated for lieutenant
governor, Nathan I ’rlman of
New York city for ; y general
and John A. May, G.o.crsville, for
comptroller.
The convention at its evening ses-
sion heard Col. Frank Knox, Re-
po olican vice presidential candi-
date, in a strong attack on the New
Deal.
The Democrats renominated Gov.
Herbert H. Lehman, and his can-
didacy was warmly espoused by
President Roosevelt, who went to
Syracuse to deliver his first speech
as an avowed candidate. The Presi-
dent took occasion to deny again
that he seeks Communist support
and alleged that issue was a "red
herring" dragged across the trail
by his opponents.
f) New Tork Poil.-WNU Service,
Here’s Early Slant
on Major Eastern
Grid Alina Momsies
Y OUR scribe m»y as well put hi*
* neck out among the celebrated
gentlemen who boast h.w they ran
handicap a most humanly erratic
sport with prim statistic* Herewith
Is the dope concerning the 1936 pros-
pects of the East's leading gridiron
alma momsies.
YALE—After two years of proba-
tion Bob Beckwith is back at center
and the line seems likely to be the
strongest since Pond and Neale took
over the coaching assignment. Bob
Train will be missed at end but, if
Scott passes his exams and teams
' up with Wright at tackle, thoy'll
| make a strong combination.
HARVARD — Fair enough line,
especially at tho tackles, where
1 Gaffney and Kerkovian perform. Of-
fense seems woefully weak, though,
and, unless some sophomore bark
| surprises, Prof. Harlow may nerd
io rail out some of those marines
j who useo to perform for him at
Western Maryland.
Italy’s Cabinet Votes
to Devalue the Lira
r* OLLOWING the example set by
F France and other countries, the
Italian cabinet voted to devalue the
lira, setting its value at approxi-
mately 5.2 cents, as compared with
the latest previous figure of 7.6
cents. The cabinet also let it be
known that it would take action to
prevent rent and price increases;
and it voted a new 5 per cent capital
levy to which property ov/ners are
obliged to subscribe to the extent
of 5 per cent of their wealth.
The gold value of the lira was
placed at 4.677 grams of gold for
each 100 lire. Gold reserver of the
Bank of Italy will be revalued on the
basis of the new lira with the surplus
to be placed at the disposition of the
treasury.
French Communists and
Fascists Clash
ITRANCE may be on the verge of
F a civil war between Communists
and Fascists comparable to the ter-
rible conflict in Spain. In Paris
desperate fighting already has be-
gun. The Reds, numbering many
thousands, and the nationalists, un-
der orders from Col. Francois de la
Rocque whose Croix de Feux or-
ganization was disbanded by the
government, undertook rival dem-
onstrations; and the result was a
day-long series of street battles in
which hundreds were wounded. Or-
der was finally restored for the
time being by a force of 12.00C re-
publican guards and police.
The Nationalist-rightists said the
fighting “was only beginning.”
Troubles resulting from devaluation
of the franc would be severe and
numerous, they predicted. Leftists
charged the battles were part of a
rightist plot to provoke trouble for
the Socialist government.
In London, also, there was a big
riot in which a hundred persons
were injured. Sir Oswald Mosley’s
Black Shirts, a Fascist organiza-
tion, planned a parade but Com-
munists and Socialists numbering
100,000 were determined to prevent
it and battled with a big force of
east end police to get at their ene-
mies. The authorities forbade the
parade as scheduled but the oppos-
ing mobs got together in various
localities and fought desperately.
Sir Oswald issued a statement
charging that the “British govern-
ment has openly surrendered to
Red terror.”
A1 Smith Comes Out
for Gov. Landon
IT RANK KNOX, President Roose-
F velt and A1 Smith, all on the
air the same evening, provided a
political feast for radio listeners.
Colonel Knox, speaking at Pitts-
burgh, reiterated and substantiated
his former assertion that New Deal
financial policies were imperiling
savings accounts and insurance pol-
icies. Mr. Roosevelt, not so elo-
quent as usual, defended the spend-
ing policies of his administration.
He, too, spoke at Pittsburgh. The
high spot of the evening came at
the close of A1 Smith’s address to
a women’s organization in New
York city. He had been treating of
the New Deal and its leaders with
biting sarcasm and wound up with
the dramatic declaration:
"I firmly believe that the remedy
for all the ills that we are suffering
from today is the election of Alfred
M. Landon."
Frankfort, Ky., Celebrates
Its Sesquicentennial
p ESIDENTS of Frankfort, Ky.,
I*, stopped work and politics for
three days and, with thousands of
guests, celebrated the sesquicenten-
nial of their city. A pioneer touch
was given the affair by the arrival
of many families from other parts
of Kentucky in horse-drawn vehicles
and on horseback. There were his-
torical parades and services, an
old fashioned burgoo feast, and a
formal banquet at which addresses
were delivered by Admiral Hugh
Rodman of the navy and Governor
Chandler of Kentucky.
“Windfall" Tax Case to
Be Pecided by Courts
TN WHAT was said by court at*
I taches to be the first important
ruling anywhere on numerous suits
filed by packing companies and
others against government collection
of the "windfall" tax, Judge Robert
C. Baltzell of the United States dis-
trict court at Indianapolis, over-
ruled the government’s motion to
dismiss a suit for an injunction filed
by Kingan and Company, meat
packers.
Supreme Court May Pass
on Wagner Labor Act
A PPEALS filed by the national
z* labor relations board offer the
Supreme court five new opportuni-
ties to pass on the constitutionality
of the Wagner labor relations act.
The board asked the high tribunal
to review rulings in a case involv-
ing the Jones & Laughlin Steel cor-
poration of Pittsburgh, two involv-
ing the Freuhauf Trailer company
of Canton, Ohio, and two affecting
the Friedman-Harry Marks Cloth-
ing company, New York.
PRINCETON—When Gil Lea, last
and greatest of the football Lens,
graduated in June,
Princeton took stock
q9H|m and found three o’.h-
er first-string ends
also were missing.
IP _ 1 This is the only spot
f causing Coach Cris-
p ler much concern
i y L a j now and the Sophs
Bfe. insist he really has
nothing to worry
about. Charley Toll,
& who may go down in
Fritz Crisler Na”au his‘or/ *s
another such tackle
as Ceppi, Barfield, Keck, Cooney,
Hart, Hillebrand, Biffoy Lea and
Hector Cowan, is the one to watch
in the line. Although there is no
fullback quite as good as the de-
parted Pepper Constable, Chick
Kaufman and Ken Sandbach are
dashing ball-carriers and .t is diffi-
cult for neutrals to believe the Ti-
gers will not be as good 3s last year.
PENN—Veteran, mostly seniors,
team which should be one of the
best but which probably will en-
counter the customary Penn politi-
cal reverses. Gisburne is the key
tackle.
COLUMBIA—Far better than last
fall. Sid Luckman, triple-threat
back, and Art Radvilas, a fine end,
are the best of some unusually
strong sophs, while Tackle Bale-
man is the ace of the line.
DARTMOUTH—Weak at guards
and none too sure Mutt Ray will
recover sufficiently to resume star-
ring at center. Hollingsworth, late
1935 discovery, may star as a triple
threat along with several other fleet
backs.
CORNELL—Several teams will
find the Big Red tough to take but
Cornell is at least a year away
from what old grads hoped for when
they hired Coach Snavely. Very
good sophomores and Captair Jack
Ratten, already celebrated ac a de-
fensive star, may be the season's
best kicker.
FORDHAM—Spies insist Jimmy
Crowley is working with numerous
rugt/od and powerful candidates, but
that the Rams are by no means as
strong as touted. There may be
some trouble filling the tackle gaps
left by Sarno and Sabo.
MANHATTAN—Line is certainly
big and fast and probably dumb.
Tuckey could be the best fullback
in the East. Chick Meehan is op-
timistic as usual and he may be
right about several of those sur-
prises he promises to spring.
N. Y. U.—Not as strong as last
year and definitely misses the kick-
ing and passing of Big Ed Smith.
PITT—A fine big bunch of boys
with just one weakness, the lack of
a Nick Klisky at center. Jock Suth-
erland, ordinarily very good at de-
veloping pivots, now is working on
that problem.
ARMY—Gar Davidson says the
Cadets are big and strong with more
reserves thau last year but that
they lack speed. Monk Meyer, of
course, Is the pigskin toting star
and Bob Kasper seems to be doing
all right, so far, at the difficult Job
of replacing Quarterback Grohs.
NAVY—Another possible dark
horse inspired by the revenge motif.
Still sore over that first half run-
away last December, and even now
more concerned with the /irmy con-
test than with early season affairs.
Whisperers confide that so far it
shapes up as one of the weaker
Middy teams.
HOLY CROSS—Big, strong and
fast with a nice smattering of sophs
headed by Hank Ouellette, former
Haverhill high star. This crack ball
carrier may shove Rex Kidd, ace
pilot for (he past two seasons, right
out of the lineup.
NOT IN THE BOX SCORE;
|?OLK8 are mumbling about th-i
F way the Vankers are handling
tholr World Series ticket sale . . .
Babe Ruth saya til* only batting
practice this year came when he
missed on the llrst three cuts and
broke the bat when he finally con-
nected ... Is a celebrated sports
hero, rather new to the turf and
reported to be winning and losing
vast sums at the tracks, really bet-
ting for one of the best educated
books? . , . Adolfo L,uque, Ihe vory
able coach of Ihe Giants Is one of
the most accomplished rhumba
daneera of the generation . . .
Carda and Dodger* picked Fred
Fitzsimmons to give Carl Hubboll
the most pitching help in the World
Series. They say the big fellow is
almost as fast as he wa* five years
ago.
What celebrated college Is
squawking about letting its basket-
bull team udd to the Garden profits
this winter? The reason seems to be
that the front for the Garden's court
activities is too closely and actively
connected with a track bookmaking
minor politician . . . Tom Laird, the
celebrated sports editor who flew
In from California a day or two
ago. says that Joe Murty, latest
high - priced Pacific Coast league
sensation, is by no means a Dl*
Maggio. Dan Morgan, who used to
manage him, says that Trainer Bill
Schaefer of the Giants was the
best gymnasium fighter he ever saw
. . . Frankie Frisch’s legs are black
and blue from hip to ankle due to
the beatings he took while attempt-
ing to rally the Cards by personal
appearances at second base.
If It Is true what they say about
Dixie, Georgia will have the best
football team down that way this
season. Spec Towns, the Olympic
hurdling ace who plays end, and
Tommy Haygood, 200-pound Junior
tackle, are the keymen of a really
great line . . . Also you might
keep an eye on Gintoff, Boston col-
lege's 197-pound sophomore. When
Gil Dobie gets a back that big and
fast he usually goes places.
Lefty O'Doul, the former Yan-
kee, Dodger and Giant, who
now manages the
San Francisco club,
will witness the
World Series . . .
If New York state
racing officials ever
get time to wander
from the betting
ring into the pad-
dock they might no-
tice something
which could be
changed to the bene-
fit of unwary tax-
payers. Under the
present layout sharpshooters have
too much access, or, at least, ways
of getting in touch with jockeys at
local tracks . . . Watty Clarke says
that Leo Durocher, once a woeful
hitter, now drives a ball back at
a pitcher harder than any other Na-
tional league batter.
Olympic Stars May Turn
Pro If Real Money Put Up
Tricta of the Uns
In his contribution to the new
Morris book, Mr. Shaw speaks of^
the Fabian but top-hatted Mr.
Hyndman ns "altogether an as-
suming man, quite naturally and
unconsciously." The word is well
chosen, but how seldom it is that
we And “assuming" used as the
opposite to "unassuming." But
"uns" play us many tricks of
that kind.
A man may be uncouth, but
who ever was “couth?” Who ever
heard of a "ruly" Instead of an
unruly temper? We all know
Charles II's deathbed apology, but
what would be a "conscionable"
time for one to take in dying?—*
London Observer.
MUSCLES FELT
STIFF
AND SORE
Got QuickVvQ
RELIEF^
From Pain
If muscles in your legs, arms, chest,
back or shoulders feel stiff and sore, get
a bottle of Hamlins Wizard Oil and (jet
quick relief. Rub it on—rub it in.
Warms—soothes—gives wonderful com-
fort. Will not stain. At all druggists.
HAMLINS,. *
"WIZARD OIL
,Fo(MCIRCULAR ACHES^lnd PAINS
Due to RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA
LUMBAGO CHEST COLDS
Credit Due
Ancestors may have built the
family fortune, but it takes pretty
good ability to preserve it intact.
Lefty O’Doul
If some of those babbling pro-
moters lay some real money on the
line a flock of track stars immedi-
ately will turn pro. Several Olym-
pic stars admit frankly that they are
much interested in open meets but
do not wish to lose their amateur
standing until they are guaranteed
a better proposition . . . Frank
Graham, (he famous sports colum-
nist, started writing baseball twenty
years ago. In his first week he saw
Jim Lavender pitch a no-hit game
for the Cubs against the Giants and
watched Bancroft and Stock make
a triple play (It really could have
been completed by Bancroft alone)
in a Philly-Giant contest . . . Bill
Farnsworth and Toney Betts, the
eminent sports writers, were send-
ing it in in such huge chunks that
Aqueduct clubhouse bookies had the
jitters while paying off recently . . .
Doc Morris, the famous fight pub-
licist, has been picked as press
agent for the Rev. (Share the
Wealth) Smith who soon will speak
at the New York Hippodrome.
Coach Clair Bee says his Long
island U. quintet, undefeated last
year, will be very good again this
winter but that it is a senior com-
bination and will lose three or four
games . . . Dutch Bergman, Catho-
lic U. coach, has prepared a book
called “Fifty Football Plays.” . . .
International leaguers say that Mc-
Carthy and Koy of the Newark
Bears were almost ruined by the
night baseball played on the Yankee
farm this summer . . . The Yan-
kees made 26 home runs off Phil-
adelphia pitchers this season
. . . Wade Killefer of Indianapolis
and Donie Bush of Minneapolis man-
age their ball clubs without signing
contracts . . . Harold Lloyd of the
movies owns a private golf course
. . . Billy Sullivan, Cleveland catch-
er, returns to his job as salesman
for a Chicago tailoring company aft-
er the baseball season . . . Hal
Trosky’s right name is Trojovsky.
Don Budge uses the heavle rack-
et in tennis ... It weighs 1514
ounces . . . Ellsworth Vines uses
a 1314 ounce racket . . . Southern
California has a Japanese quarter
back on Its freshman football squad.
University of Texas Is not issuing
No. 33 on its football Jersies . . .
That was the number worn by Bohn
Hilliard, who scored the touchdown
that beat Notre Dame in 1934 , . .
“Whenever a back comes along who
shows he is worthy to wear it, we’ll
let him have the Jersey ” Coach
Jack Chevlgny told his squad, “but
until then the number Is In the
trophy room,"
Bright Outlook
"What made the good old days
"good" was that you were young.
A Three Days’ Cough
Is Your Danger Signal
No matter how many medicines
you have tried for your cough, chest
cold or bronchial irritation, you can
get relief now with Creomulsion.
Serious trouble may be brewing and
you cannot afford to take a chance
with anything less than Creomul-
6ion, which goes right to the seat
of the trouble to aid nature to
soothe and heal the inflamed mem-
branes as the germ-laden phlegm
Is loosened and expelled.
Even if other remedies have
failed, don’t be discouraged, your
druggist is authorized to guarantee
Creomulsion and to refund your
money If you are not satisfied with
results from the very first bottle.
Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.)
Cut a Virtue
Meekness is the weakest of the
virtues.
When Women
Need Cardui
If you seem to hove lost some of
your strength you had for your
: favorite activities, or foryour house-
work . . . and care less nbout your
; meals . . . and suffer severe dis-
! comfort at certain times . . . try
Cardui!
Thousands and thousands of
women sny it has helped them.
By increasing the nppetite, im-
proving digestion, Cardui helps you
to get more nourishment. Asstrcngth
returns, unnecessary functional
aches, pains nnd nervousness Just
seem to go away.
FURNACE and STOVE REPAIRS
For Every Kind and Make in Stock at
A A DDAIIK'D SUPPLY COMPANY
A> III D If MU Elf St. L«ula, MIhnH
• ASK TOUR DEALER TO WRITE US
ITCHING SCALP-
DANDRUFF [
For annoying I
itching and un- I
sightly Dan>|
druff, use Glov-1
er’s. Start today I
with Glover’s I
Mange Medi* I
cine and follow I
with GloTet’if
Medicated Soap i
for the shampoo. I
Sold by all Drag-1
WNU-P~
"42-38
HELP
FOR
Warm bath with Cuticura Soap greatly
Boothes and benefits. Then apply
Cuticura Ointment-effective treatment
and medication for local irritations. Try
it tonight. In morning, dust with Cuticura
Talcum to help prevent shoo discomfort*
FREE samples by writing’’Cuticura” Dept 31,
Malden, Mass.
CUTICURA OINTMENT
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Mrs. J. W. Dismukes and Sons. Palacios Beacon (Palacios, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 15, 1936, newspaper, October 15, 1936; Palacios, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth724628/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Palacios Library.